Four years ago, The Columbian editorialized that DNA testing of suspects should be allowed after arrests in serious criminal cases. We answered the invasion-of-privacy complaint by pointing out that DNA tests are no more intrusive than fingerprints or mug shots of suspects, which have been legal and useful for years.
On Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in that direction, upholding a Maryland law in a 5-to-4 decision. It was the proper ruling for the same reasons described in the 2009 editorial, which supported a bill in the Legislature that would have allowed DNA testing of arrestees in serious crime cases. The bill carried the provision that a DNA profile would be removed from a database if there is no conviction.
That bill failed, as did a similar bill in 2012 sponsored by current state Sen. Jeannie Darneille, D-Tacoma, who was a member of the state House at the time. As The News Tribune reported, that bill “would have required collection of DNA samples from persons arrested for major felonies and two gross misdemeanors: stalking and violating a protection order. State law already allows for DNA collection upon conviction or with a search warrant.” Darneille’s measure declared that a “suspect found not guilty or whose charge was reduced to a misdemeanor could ask that the DNA sample be destroyed and removed from the DNA identification system.” That bill, too, did not pass.
But we suspect this week’s Supreme Court ruling might resurrect legislators’ interest in the collection of DNA samples, which Maryland Attorney General Doug Gensler told the high court is “the fingerprinting of the 21st century.”